James Gordon Bennett, Sr.

About James Gordon Bennett, Sr.

Who is it?: Founder of New York Herald
Birth Day: September 01, 1795
Birth Place: Keith, United States
Died On: June 1, 1872 (1872-07) (aged 76)\nManhattan, New York City, U.S.
Birth Sign: Libra
Occupation: Publisher
Known for: Founder of New York Herald
Spouse(s): Henrietta Agnes Crean (m. 1840; his death 1872)
Children: 3, including James Jr.

James Gordon Bennett, Sr. Net Worth

James Gordon Bennett, Sr. was born on September 01, 1795 in Keith, United States, is Founder of New York Herald. James Gordon Bennett, Sr. was the founder and editor of the New York Herald; he is also popularly dubbed as the father of modern journalism. Born in Scotland, Bennett Sr. was raised in a seminary for the Roman Catholic priesthood, but in 1819, he immigrated to America. After spending sometime in poor condition and working low-paid jobs, Bennett eventually settled in New York City, where he carried out subordinate work for the periodicals. Over the next ten years, James Gordon Bennett worked at various newspapers; he was Washington correspondent of the New York Enquirer, and later the assistant editor of the New York Courier and Enquirer. Subsequently, he also tried twice to launch his own newspaper but failed, both the times. In 1835, with a limited working capital, Bennett published the first number of a small one-cent paper, bearing the title of ‘The New York Herald’. Thereafter, with his knowledge and creativity, Bennett transformed the paper into a huge commercial success over the years. He understood the importance of deadline journalism and primarily focused on collecting a variety of news with assistance from sensational correspondence, introducing numerous techniques of modern journalism. In 1835, his paper published the first Wall Street financial article in America and later during the Civil War, Bennett maintained a staff of 63 war reporters for fast and efficient broadcasting. Bennett continued to edit the New York Herald almost until his death and in many ways shaped the American newspaper as it is today.
James Gordon Bennett, Sr. is a member of Media Personalities

💰 Net worth: Under Review

Some James Gordon Bennett, Sr. images

Biography/Timeline

1819

In 1819, he joined a friend who was sailing to North America. After four weeks they landed in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where Bennett briefly worked as a schoolmaster till he had enough money to sail south to Portland, Maine, where he again taught school in the village of Addison, moving on to Boston, Massachusetts by New Year's Day, 1820. He worked in New England as a proofreader and bookseller before the Charleston Courier in Charleston, South Carolina hired him to translate Spanish language news reports, so he briefly relocated to The South. He moved back north to New York City in 1823, where he worked first as a freelance paper Writer and, then, assistant Editor of the New York Courier and Enquirer, one of the oldest newspapers in the city.

1821

He later endorsed Southerner Democrat and incumbent Vice President John C. Breckinridge (1821-1875, served 1857-1861), of Kentucky under Buchanan for the 1860 presidential campaign, then shifted to John Bell (1796-1869), of Tennessee running as a Constitutional Unionist among the four presidential candidates in the confused but pivotal general election in November 1860. During the midst of the following Civil War (1861-1865), he promoted former Union Army General-in-Chief George B. McClellan (1826-1885), nominated from the Democratic Party in the 1864 Election, campaigning for a negotiated peace with the South against a second term for wartime 16th President Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865, served 1861-1865), but the paper itself endorsed no candidate for the unusual war election of 1864.

1835

In May 1835, Bennett began the New York Herald after years of failing to start a paper. After only a year of publication, in April 1836, it shocked readers with front–page coverage of the grisly murder of prostitute Helen Jewett; Bennett got a scoop and conducted the first-ever newspaper interview for it. In Business and circulation policy, The Herald initiated a cash–in–advance policy for advertisers, which later became the industry standard. Bennett was also at the forefront of using the latest Technology to gather and report the news, and added pictorial illustrations produced from woodcuts. In 1839, Bennett was granted the first ever exclusive interview to a sitting President of the United States, the eighth occupant, Martin Van Buren (1782-1862, served 1837-1841).

1840

On June 6, 1840 he had married Henrietta Agnes Crean in New York. They had three children, including:

1841

By the time Bennett turned control of the New York Herald over to his son James Gordon Bennett Jr. (1841-1912), at age 25 in 1866, it had the highest circulation in America but would soon face increasing competition from Greeley's Tribune and soon in the next decades, from Joseph Pulitzer's New York World, william Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, along with Henry J. Raymond's The New York Times. However, under the younger Bennetts' stewardship, the paper slowly declined under the increasing stiff competition and changing technologies in the late 18th century and, after his 1912 death, it was merged a decade later with its former arch-rival, the New York Tribune in 1924, becoming the New York Herald Tribune for another 42 years meeting with considerable success and reputation in its near last half-century, until finally closing in 1966-1967.

1865

Although he generally opposed Republican Abraham Lincoln, Bennett still backed the Northern cause with the Union, then took the lead to turn the Republican war President into a martyr after his sudden April 14, 1865 assassination at Ford's Theater in Washington. He favored most of successor 17th President Andrew Johnson (1808-1875, served 1865-1869), former Vice President for one month in Lincoln's brief second term, a War Democrat, former unseceded U.S. Senator and loyal wartime Governor of Tennessee, and his following moderate Reconstruction Era policies and proposals towards the defeated South, following what was thought to be would have been President Lincoln's gentle hand had he lived.

1872

He died in Manhattan, New York City, on June 1, 1872. This was five months before his rival / competitor Horace Greeley also succumbed to illness in November 1872, after his disastrous presidential election campaign of 1872. He was interred at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York City.

2008

Bennett's account of the infamous Helen Jewett murder in the Herald was selected by The Library of America for inclusion in the 2008 anthology True Crime.

2018

He has a street named for him from West 181st Street to Hillside Avenue in the Washington Heights neighborhood of northern Manhattan, and a New York City park, Bennett Park named in his honor along Fort Washington Avenue. The Avenue Gordon Bennett in Paris, France with Stade de Roland Garros, site of the French Open, tennis tournament, is also named after James Gordon Bennett, Sr., possibly thanks to his son.